Moderately beyond clique-width: reduced component max-leaf and related parameters

Abstract

Reduced parameters [BKW, JCTB '26; BKRT, SODA '22] are defined via contraction sequences. Based on this framework, we introduce the reduced component max-leaf, denoted by cml, where component max-leaf is the maximum number of leaves in any spanning tree of any connected component. Reduced component max-leaf is strictly sandwiched between clique-width and reduced bandwidth, it is bounded in unit interval graphs, and unbounded in planar graphs. We design polynomial-time algorithms for problems such as Maximum Induced d-Regular Subgraph and Induced Disjoint Paths in graphs given with a contraction sequence witnessing low cml, unifying and extending tractability results for classes of bounded clique-width and unit interval graphs. We get the following collapses in sparse classes of bounded cml: bounded maximum degree implies bounded treewidth, whereas Kt,t-subgraph-freeness implies strongly sublinear treewidth; we show the latter, more generally, for classes of bounded reduced cutwidth. We establish the former result by showing that graphs with bounded cml admit balanced separators dominated by a bounded number of vertices. We then showcase an application of the reduced parameters to establishing non-transducibility results. We prove that for most reduced parameters p (including reduced bandwidth), the family of classes of bounded p is closed under first-order transductions. We then answer a question of [BKW '26] by showing that the 3-dimensional grids have unbounded reduced bandwidth. As the class of planar graphs (or any class of bounded genus) has bounded reduced bandwidth [BKW '26], this reproves a recent result [GPP, LICS '25] that planar graphs do not first-order transduce the 3-dimensional grids.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…